Other marketing efforts throughout the NFL include the Black Panther raised fist power sign, or a separate "black" national anthem to stand for while kneeling for our country's national anthem because obviously that will achieve the goal of bringing us all together. Marketing geniuses.
One of the worst calls the NFL has ever made . . . "For my hometown team, the Pittsburgh Steelers, in their opening game, they decided to honor Antwon Rose as their hometown cause. For those unfamiliar with Mr. Rose, in the summer of 2018, he engaged in a drive-by shooting, fled from the shot up car as part of the police response to the shooting traffic stop within minutes of the shooting, and was shot as a fleeing felon by the police officer. The trial and jury deliberation were extremely short; the policeman was not guilty of criminal homicide.
"The Steelers were not interested in the person whom Antwon Rose participated in trying to kill. The Steelers were not interested in the disruption caused by criminals conducting drive-by shootings in the community where Mr. Rose chose to practice his felony attempted murder. The Pittsburgh Steelers were interested in only the fact that the dead felon was black and the police officer was white." . . .
Roger Goodell and Wokeness Have Ensured the Decline of the NFL . . . "For me and undoubtedly millions of other Americans, it all stops now. I refuse to enable these entitled millionaires who subsist on my money and my attention as they attempt to lecture me about how it's somehow wrong to challenge the ridiculous myth that white cops are out on the streets every night hunting poor black people, or that presumed martyrs like George Floyd were killed by police because of racism when nary a single shred of evidence exists to substantiate such claims, or that millionaires kneeling for the National Anthem in a refusal to "show pride" (those are Colin Kaepernick's words, not mine) in this nation, which has given those players their wealth and fame, is somehow courageous." . . .
Get Woke, Go Broke: NFL's 'Sunday Night Football' Debut Ratings Way Down From 2019 . . . "NFL fans just want to watch some football. I don’t need some privileged athlete who has been a multimillionaire since he was 25 pretending to be my moral better. That’s not what he does better than I do. He plays football better. It would be nice if they could focus on that." . . . "Sunday’s games all featured some sort of B.S. moral posturing, of course. I’m taking bets on how long it will be until the networks and the NFL get corporate sponsors for the virtue-signaling moments." . . .